Tommy Thompson on Immigration

Former Secretary of H.H.S.; former Republican Governor (WI)

No amnesty; secure the border first

Q: Do you support this pending compromise legislation?

The first thing you have to do is you got to secure the border. Securing the border is going to allow everything else to follow. But unless you secure the border, it is not right to give 12 million
individuals who have illegal rights into this country status before that border is protected. There should be no amnesty. And this bill, no matter how you cover it, is an amnesty bill. And the people in this country do not believe in that bill.

Source: 2007 GOP debate at Saint Anselm College
Jun 3, 2007

Keep rule barring immigrants from running for president

Q: Should we change our Constitution to allow men like Mel Martinez, born in Cuba, and Arnold Schwarzenegger, born in Austria, to stand here some night as candidates for president?

ROMNEY: Never given that a lot of thought, but with
Arnold sitting there, Iíll give it some thought, but probably not.

Gov. THOMPSON: No.

HUCKABEE: After Iíve served eight years as president, Iíd be happy to change the Constitution for Governor Schwarzenegger.

Ease Canadian border-crossing rules.

WHEREAS, the United States and Canada share the longest undefended border in the world; and

WHEREAS, the United States and Canada have the largest bilateral trade relationship in the world, exceeding $1 billion every day; and

WHEREAS, the rate of cross-border traffic is steadily increasing, with billions of dollars worth of goods and tens of millions of American and Canadian citizens crossing the land border each year; and

WHEREAS, Section 110 of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 requires the U.S. Attorney General to develop an automated entry-exit control system to register ďall aliensĒ entering and departing the United States; and

WHEREAS, this system will place an unmanageable requirement on border-crossing services, impose serious delays at the Canada-U.S. land border and result in unintended negative consequences for international trade, tourism, and the economies in our region; and

WHEREAS, reports about serious congestion at the Canada-U.S. border have generated concern and uncertainty in the business community; and

WHEREAS, the United States Senate has passed the Commerce-State-Justice Appropriations Bill and State Department Reauthorization legislation which repeal the entry-exit control system required by Section 110; now therefore be it

RESOLVED, that the Midwestern Governorsí Conference calls on Congress and the President to repeal Section 110 because of the its adverse impact on legitimate cross border traffic at land border points of entry.